Finding your true self. Being genuine. Aligning your values and your choices. I love that stuff! It’s what I do with clients, what I share with readers, what I do in my free time. It’s at the heart of what it means to be Singularly Sensitive, uniquely you.
It is such a noble goal: to live a life of authenticity.
And it is hard. So hard.
Too often, self-help and pop culture promise us that if we’re true to ourselves, life will click into place, we’ll feel great, and everything will be easy. Authenticity is just a box to check on the way to having your dream life.
I understand the appeal of this belief, even though I know it’s fiction. It offers the promise that we can find the one “right” way to live our lives, after which we’ll have smooth sailing.
But what happens when our values conflict? Or we are committed to a role we chose (spouse, parent, employee), but struggle to live out the realities of that role?
Authenticity is complicated. At times it will feel incredible to be genuinely ourselves. And at other times, it will feel awful.
Being authentic means that, sometimes, we will be at odds with people who matter to us. We are going to feel awkward or defensive. We will feel the ache of not fitting in, the friction of self-doubt, the sting of rejection.
So why bother being authentic when it hurts?
I’m not going to answer that question for you. But I’ll give you a peak at my answer sheet.
As a kid, my dad would often tell me and my brother, “pick your poison.” Once I hit my tween years, I would role my eyes when he said it. As if! I was going to figure out a way to avoid the poison entirely.
But, with time, I learned that he was right. You can choose what kind of pain you’re willing to experience. There is pain in living authentically. A different kind of suffering comes from not being true to ourselves.
More and more, I choose the pain of living authentically. It can be incredibly intense, especially when it leaves me feeling disconnected from others. However, beneath that initial suffering, I know I can connect with a sense of self-acceptance and self-loyalty. Sometimes, there’s even a sense of peace and contentment.
That’s the poison I’ll take.
What will you do? Find your own answer. After all, that’s part of living authentically, too. Wishing you a Singularly Sensitive way forward!
When you are living authentically, it means you are true to yourself and others, doesn’t it? That means being ready and willing to expose yourself to them blatantly, thoughts, feelings, emotions and all! Whatever comes and goes without giving it any more control over you. That’s where the pain comes because you can be easily misunderstood. There is so much room for miscommunication!
And yet I have found that your authenticity wins you over every act of dissonance! Authenticity means freedom of the mind to focus on the rings that matter. It means freedom in relations, freedom in thought and action and a general feeling of fullness and light in the heart! Even if it means losing someone close to your heart! And lucky me, my authenticity brought them back!
Thank you for sharing this, I found it a very interesting read. When I rediscovered myself and learned to live more authentically, I felt freedom. And the pain of living inauthentically was greater than the pain of sharing myself with the world.